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are original megalithic decipherment sites.

Killadeas in County Fermanagh, Ireland represents Hercules as a bear in the
astronomical geodetic system of Ancient Ireland.

This fantastic megalith has carvings on it showing the constellation
Hercules as a powerful bear with a comb of honey in its paws, and with
many other figures on the stone, including a deer, a bear cub, and a cat (lynx?) of
some kind carrying her kitten, representing the surrounding constellations.

Linguistically, in KIL-LADEAS, LADEAS is like Latvian LACIS "bear".

The second graphic above
shows just two large heads which are also on the megalith but
which disappear in the drawing if details are included. Look
carefully at the drawing here and then at the cited photos online and
you will see these heads, especially the right one, easily, if you
look at the stone long enough - it is a bit like those magic eye
drawings which were popular some years ago - you have to stare at it
a while to see the hidden picture.
It is a masterpiece of art, dating to at least 3000 BC.

The stone also contains a hidden picture on the right side not shown here.
It is of a controversial nature. You will have to look at the right
side of the photographs of this megalith online (at the URL referred
to in the normal killadeas drawing) and we recommend you use a
graphic program such as Paint Shop Pro to enlarge the picture and
try to draw what you see along the most prominent lines visible. If
you see nothing special on the right side, fine. If you find
something Herculean, then you probably see what we see.

This is definitely a stone with the signature of Merlin (Morias,
Aesculapius) on it, since stones with similar subject matter also
exist in Scotland, England and Wales, e.g. as we have discovered,
on a relief and in the structure of Arthur's Stone Maen Ceti in Wales,
which we think contains King Arthur's fabled sword,
a type of sword which can not be pulled out of that stone, we assure you.

The hidden megalithic art shows just what gave Hercules his name
and why he was represented as Kaiechos (= Latvian Kusis)
on Old Kingdom Pharaonic hieroglyphs in Egypt.
We might say here tongue in cheek, "Men will be Min".
The spelling change is intended as a hint to the hidden art.

The webmaster of www.megaliths.co.uk is Andis Kaulins
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